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Latinos against La Raza racism and cultural insensitivity toward the USA.
Many Latinos within our community suffer from the idea that we are victims. As a result, we love to﻿ cry racism, our most popular attack toward anyone non-Hispanic. Ironically, we then become highly sensitive and loudly defensive when our very own racist, ethno-centric ideology is publicized. Education and freeing ourselves from victimhood will strengthen our community. Visit our site and watch the educational videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/LaRazaRacism

Monday, July 27, 2009

Authorities in Mexico on Sunday named the man suspected of pulling the trigger in the fatal shooting of a U.S. Border Patrol agent working alone in a remote section of San Diego County.

Mexican federal police announced that the main suspect in the killing is 36-year-old Ernesto Parra Valenzuela, one of five men detained since the Thursday shooting of Agent Robert Rosas.

Parra Valenzuela was taken into custody Friday and was reportedly carrying a Border Patrol-issued pistol at the time of his arrest, police in Tecate said. Records show Parra Valenzuela had not retained an attorney Sunday. Four other men suspected of involvement in the killing were detained Saturday on a road near Tecate.

Federal police wouldn't say what role, if any, the other four men may have played in the death but said in a statement that the detentions had been "carried out in support of U.S. government authorities, as a result of the homicide of Border Patrol agent Robert Rosas."

They said at least one of the suspects — alleged immigrant trafficker Jose Eugenio Quintero Ruiz, 49 — had knowledge of the killing. The statement said Quintero Ruiz identified Parra Valenzuela as "the person who killed the Border Patrol agent."

The other suspects were identified as Quintero Ruiz's brother Jose Eugenio Quintero Ruiz, 49, and taxi drivers Jose Alfredo Camacho, 34, and Antonio Balladares, 57. Rosas, a 30-year-old father of two, was killed Thursday while responding alone to a suspected border incursion near Campo, a town in rugged, arid terrain in southeastern San Diego County. He was shot in the head and body and was dead when other agents arrived, said Keith Slotter, special agent in charge of the FBI's San Diego bureau.